Garfield County Democrat. (Enid, Okla.), Vol. 11, No. 5, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 27, 1907 Page: 3 of 9
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WILL HE JIM GROW Li
CORPORATION COMMISSION MAY
ORDER SEPARATE CARS
Draft of Proposed Order Has Been
Made and Is in Hands of Attorney
General—Separate Apartments in
Coaches
GUTHRIE: Oklahoma is to have
"Jim Crow" cars by 'executive order.
Without watting for the slow process
legislation, the corporation iomniia-
sion intends to issue an order requiring
She railroads to put "Jim Crow" regu-
lation® into effect,
A draft of the proposed order has
been made and is in the hands of At-
torney General West. It proposes to
require the railroads to maintain sep-
arate apartments in their coaches and
waiting rooms for negroes and whites.
It is generally believed '.that the
firs', legislature will pass a "Jim
Crew" law, but it could not be effec-
tive until ninety days after the legis-
lature adjourned unless declared an
emergency act and the commission is
planning to place such a provision in
effect until the legislature ucts.
The corporation commission of Ar-
kansas, Oklahoma and Texas will hold
a joint meeting soon, probably at
Shawnee, where they will prepare a
schedule of interstate freight and pas-
senger rates which they will present
Jto the interstate commerce commis-
sion, asking for action along that line
by the national body.
The Port Smith & Western railroad
has refused to comply with the order
of the railroad commission to put a
two-cent fare in force. Members of
the commission believe that they
have the power to enforce their own
orders, and declare that they will pro-
ceed against the railroad.
The board is contemplating an or-
der placing a reciprocal demurrage
regulation in effect.
CHALLENGES GOVERNOR'S RIGHT
Under Army Rules Military Staff
Could Not Be removed
GUTHRIE: Because of the fact
that the Oklahoma National guard,
like that of numerous other states, is
now under the direct control of the
national war department, the act of
Governor C. N. Haskell in appointing
a new military staff is being chal-
lenged. It is held that the staff under
Governor Frantz were enlisted men,
whose commissions have not expired
and that under the regular army
rules they could not legally be de-
prived of their positions and title un-
til the term of enlistment should ex-
pire. The Oklahoma guard came un-
der the war department through the
provisions of the Dick congressional
bill. None of the old staff asked to
be retained under Haskell, as the
places have always been considered
personal appointments by the gov-
ernor, but this is the first time the
Dick bill provisions became effective.
It is an interesting point which Seec-
retary Taft of the war department
may be asked to settle.
Hunter to Give Up Chairmanship
GUTHRIE: Following a two days'
conference here between J. D. Harris,
an inspector for the department of
justice at Washington, ex-Governor
Frank Frant and Charles E. Hunter,
republican state chairman, it became
known that Hunter has been notified
from the department of justice that
he must choose between giving up
the state chairmanship and the posi-
tion of clerk of the federal court of
the Western Oklahoma district, to
which he was recently appointed by
Judge John H. Cotteral.
The department rules that Hunter
as state chairman violates the de-
partment's regulation tllat none of its
sub-officials shall participate in poll-
tics.
It is understood that Hunter will
surrender the chairmanship.
MILLION AND A HALF SHORT
J Cotton Production of United States as
r Given by Census Bureau
, * NEW YORK: Oklahoma's cotton
crop ginned to November 14, In 924 gin-
neries, was 491,274 bales; New Mex-
ico's 24 bales in one ginnery. Total
for United States, 7,311,202 bales.
The government census bureau hac
issued Its report on cotton ginning for
the growth of 1907 to November 11,
showing a total of 7,311,202 bales,
counting round bales as half bales,
compared with 8,562,242 bales for 1906,
and 7,501,171 for 1905. The number ot
round bales included Is 142,609 lor
1905, and 200,866 for 1906, and 209,006
for 1906. Sea island included 42,708
for 1907, and 30,671 for 1906, and 64,-
103 for 1905. The number of active
ginneries was 26,571 for 1907.
Liquor Shipments Cannot Be Forced
KANSAS CITY: United States
Judge Smith McPherson has denied
the application of a distilling com-
pany for a mandatory injunction to
compel the American Express com-
pany to accept shipments of liquor
consigned to Oklahoma.
Unions Maintain Lobby
GUTHRIE: One of the iroit Influ-
ential lobbies that will be maintained
In Guthrie during the session of the
first state legislature, beginning De-
cember 2, will be that of the labor or-
ganizations of the new state. W. T.
Fields of El Reno, who has been ap-
pointed state librarian by Governor
Haskell, and O. C. Strode of Shawnee,
a representative of the railway fire-
men, will be at the head of the lobby,
and. In fact, both men are here now
uctively at work. Both are influen-
tial and proved that fact during the
constitutional convention.
WILL ASK MORE AUTHORITY
Oklahoma StaJj Board of Health
Thinks Law Weak
GUTHRIE: The state board of
health met here and organized, with
Dr. W. T. Titley of Muskogee, presi-
dent; Dr. J. C. Mahr of Shawnee, sec-
retary, and A. E. Davenport of Tisho-
mingo, vice president.
The new board will ask for legisla-
tion increasing its powers so that R
can revoke licenses ot practitioners \
who violate any of the regulations ot
the profession and can drive fakers
out of business. The Oklahoma law
which now applies is weak, members
of the board say, and while the board
may license physicians, It has not
final power to revoke the license and
keep out quack practitioners without
resorting to the courts.
The board called a meeting of all
the superintendents of tho, county
boards to meet with tho state board
at Muskogee December 13 and 17, to
discuss these propositions.
■;V~, ■
I
ti&ikk
Secretary of Stal'o "Bill" Cross
Who has been in a critical condi-
tion for a number of but Is now
considered out bf danger.
Calls Meeting of County Treasurers
GUTHRIE: Charles A. Taylor of
I'ond Creek, state inspector and ex-
aminer, finds himself the only official
of the kind in the United States
elected by a vote of the people through
correspondence with the other states,
the only other state examiner and In-
spector is in Kentucky and he Is a
governor's appointee.
Mr. Taylor has called a meeting of
county treasurers here on December 3 J
to talk over matters, discuss needed i
legislation and arrange a uniform
method of doing business. Because
of their experience in office, several
of the retiring county treasurers in
Oklahoma have been invited to meet
with them.
It is Mr. Taylor's duty under the
constitution to examine each county
treasurer and the state treasurer
twice, annually. He is also a memi
ber ex-officio of the state board of
equalization and the state board of
railway assessors. Tl'ie legislature
may provide further duties for him.
GENERAL NEWS NOTES
Five children of Thomas W. Zitver,
at Pleasantvllle, Pa., were cremated
and the father, mother and one child
were seriously burned when then-
home was destroyed by fire. The cause
ol' the tire is supposed to have bean a
heavy pressure of gas.
At New York. Justice Wyatt, in the
court of special sessions, held Wil-
liam R. Hearst for the grand jury on
a charge of criminal libel, preferred by
William Astor Chandler. Mr. Hearst
furnished bail.
The village of Chain, Iowa, a small
town near the Missouri line, was en-
tirely wiped out by fire. Only one
building remained.
Senator Joseph B. Foraker has been
endorsed by the republican clubs ot
Ohio for re-election to the United
States senate and for the nomination
for president.
Judge K. M. Landis, in the United
States district court at Chicago re-
fused to sign the bill of exceptions pre
pared by the attorneys for the Stan-
dard Oil company in an appeal by
which the company seeks to have set
as...e a fine of $29,240,000 recently
levied against it.
Two workmen were killed and a
building was blown to atoms at Pinole,
Cal., by an explosion of 500 pounds ot
gelatine at the E. I. DuPont-de Ne-
mour Powder Company's plant near
that place. The cause of the explosion
is unknown. The damage will amount
to $5,000.
That twenty of the memorandum
notes discounted by the Chicago Na-
tional Bank, representing the sum o!
$1,840,000, remained unpaid when the
bank suspended in December, 1905.
and that many of the notes declared
by the defense to have been paid at
maturity were not paid but simply re-
newed, were facts brought out in the
trial of John It. Walsh, charged with
misappropriation ot the bank'3 funds.
Mrs. Evelyn Romadka, the wealthy
Milwaukee woman who confessed to
various burglaries and larcenies in
Chicago in which a negro man was-
her ally, was taken to the state pen!
tentlary at Joliet to commence her
sentence of from one to twenty years
for burglary.
J. H. Fowlkes, a Doniphan, Mo.,
farmer, was murdered and robbed ot
$1,000 in a box car. His head was
beaten to a pulp and the car. in whicn
his household goods were being moved
from Doniphan to New Berne, Tenn.,
was set on fire.
FARMERS' EDUCATIONAL J
AND
CO-OPERATIVE UNION I
OF AMERICA
SOME INTERESTING DATA
The order today numbers about
2 000,000 members. The Farmers' Un
ion is the largest body of organized
labor In the world The order Is grow-
ing rapidly, and in a short time will
have all the farmers lined up
The organization is the strongest
and largest association in the world,
and if the present plans are carried
out It will be among the strongest
THE RURAL SCHOOL.
The Union News would like to stop
long enough in its fight for 15-cent
cotton, lower passenger fare, the limit-
ing or immigration, etc., to ask the
rural school teacher what he is doing
to get his community to improve the
conditions of the rural school. Are
you planning to establish a library?
Ah! Did you say that was impossible?
You are mistaken, my boy. Notify
the local Union that meets In your
community that you want to come be-
fore them and discuss the Improve-
ment of the rural school In that sec-
tion, ask them to appoint speakers for
two or three successive meetings, and
have the lady members to write es-
says on tho question of the Improve-
ment of rural schools, get together,
get up an entertainment, and either
take up a collection or charge a small
admission fee. Plan a time and have
tfomen as Well as Men Are Made
Miserable by Kidney and
Bladder Trouble.
Kidney trouble preys ftpon the mind,
discourages and lessens ambition; beauty,
vigor and cheerful-
ness soou disappeai
when the kidneys are
out of order or dis-
eased.
Kidney trouble lia9
become so prevalent
that it is not uncom-
mon for a child to be
born afilicted with
weak kidneys. If the
childurinatestoooften, if the urine scalds
the flesh, or if, when the child reaches an
age when it should be able to control the
passage, it is yet afilicted with bed-wet-
ting, depend upon it, the cause of the diffi-
culty is kidney trouble, and the first
step should be towards the treatment of
these important organs. This unpleasant
trouble is due to a diseased condition of
the kidneys and bladder and not to a
liabit as most people suppose.
Womel. as well as men are made miser-
able with kidney and bladder trouble,
organizations of any kind in the world.
j The organization extends from the ! an osyter supper, charge everybody a
! Atlantic to the Pacific, yet there is a | small ff e for coming to the supper,
vast territory untouched by the or and many other things could be men-
ganlzers. Hut this territory will bo tloned by which you could get the peo-
organized this year. | pie interested, and that Is all that Is! and both need the same great remedy,
i Tho Union Is making a noise in the necessary. Interest the people In an The mild and the immediate effect of
world, and the business world is look enterprise that will benefit the public Swamp-Root is soon realized. Itissold
!ng on with awe. For many years th«' | and they, the people, will respond. I ky druggists, in fifty
cotton and grain trusts have operate 1 The parents, tho patrons of the ru- cSn\ an^ ' ,. ufrl"1''"'!
| without fear, and their dealings with ral school, might stop and ask them- f1 /,e CS!.) °V "A"v ifci
cent ami one-dollar a
| si/.e bottles. You may (
.1 ~ t . a i a I i ..% • . . have a .sample bottle
the farmer gave them to understand selves, 'What am 1 doing? 1 would bv mail fr,'e. also d Home or
that they were not in it, but now the like to have John and Sally as well pamphlet telling all about Swamp-Root,
tanner will price his own product, f ir educated as their cousins or their ac- including many of the thousands of testi-
the man who produces a thing know
better than any one else what it costF
to produce it.
The speculator says, Sell your cot*
ton, for the country needs the money,
and if you don't there is danger of a
panic." Brother Farmer, when you
raise everything at home you need
and have shaken off tho credit system,
then what do you care if there is a
panic? It does not effect you.# The
only effect is on the fellow who has
110 commodities for market.--Banner
Union.
quaintances who live in the neighbor-
hood of a tine school, but what am I
doing to make the school which they
attend equal to any other?" You can,
it would not cost much, and you had
better invest money in education for
, your children than to invest it in any
other known commodity.—The Union
! News.
Yes, indeed, this is one of the most!
vital questions demanding considera-
tion of the Unions, and the Unions
thus gets close to the kernel of the
I matter. While you are about it, dis-
We are having some line reports jcuss, too, building better roads and
from those who are using the split log j consolidating small schools Into big
drags, and they need not, cost a cent ones, with better houses, larger camp-
either. j uses, better equipment, broader cut4-,
iMculum and above all better teachers.
The Union meeting is the place to Scl,.nce has come to lay an im|K)rtant j
discuss the improvement of the pub- part jn farm )|fi> ]nten8lve farm|ng |
J has come, and come to stay, and heads [
a3 well as hands must be put to the
Shun debt as you would a viper, severest use now to keep this twen-
Debt Is tho curse of finance. Credit tieth century pace.
has saved many a man. but Its wrecks
and ruins make a larger caravan. EVERY MERCHANT A POLITICIAN.
lie roads and the betterment of the ;
public schools.
NO REVISION OF THE TARIFF
House Members Agreed on This Point
After Talking to President
WASHINGTON: Representative
Payne, chairman of the house Lommic-
tee on ways and means, and Repre-
sentative Dalzell, ranking member of
that committee, and the members of
the house committee on rules, held a
ccnfcjence with President Roosevelt.
Both agreed that there would be no
revision of the tariff at the coming
session of congress.
Asked if this statement applied to
the schedule on news print paper and
wood pulp, Mr. Payne with a hearty
laugh remarked:
"What does that 15 per cent rate on
wood pulp amount to. If it closes up
some of the newspapers I think K
might be a good thing."
Man Charged With Arson Held
ENID: Clyde Canirax, charged
with arson, was bound over under $S,-
500 bail after a preliminary hearing
which lasted practically all of two
days. He has not given bond, but ti
Is said will do so.
This Is the first legal step In the
prosecution of the man who has been
in part shown to be connected with,
if not responsible wholly for the num-
erous fires which recently terrorized
and threatened to raze Enid. No
crime has ever been consumed her«
which has aroused more general pub'
11c interest. It Is only one week since
the entire city was an armed camp
trying to catch the fire fiend. Canl-
fax was caught, and, guilty or inno-
cent, no fires have been started since,
One of the first bills which will be
introduced when t"ie sixtieth congress
convenes in two weeks, and which
covers an important and vital prob-
lem of legislation, has been preparea
by Senator McCumber, of Nprth Da-
kota, after consultation with the pres-
ident. It provides for the federal "in-
corporation, control, and government
of associations organized to carry on
business entering Into, or becoming a
part of interstate commerce."
First, because she is a friend of the
sailor, but also because she gave near-
ly half a million dollars toward the
Young Men's Christian Association
home in Brooklyn, 5,000 enlisted men
of the navy presented Miss Helen
Gould with a silver loving cup last
week. The Y. M. C. A. buildings and
furnishings cost $900,000 and the funds
were furnished equally by Miss Gould
and Mrs. Russell Sage.
James S. Haslam, manager and con-
fidential man for Edey, Brown & San-
derson, bankers and brokers at No. z
Wall Street, New York, ha3 been ar-
re3led on a charge of stealing a |500
check from his employers. A member
of the firm said that thefts aggregat-
ing $20,000 will be charged against
Haslam.
Mrs. William T. Hedges killed her-
self and her two sons, William, aged
11, and Butler T., aged 6, by asphyx-
iation at her home in Newtonville,
Kansas. Ail cracks in the doors and
windows had been plugged and the gas
turned on.
It is surprising how many steps are The secretaries of the various corn-
wasted on the farm anil around the | mercia| clubs of Texas got together
house Just because no thought has i at Dal|as last wppk am, hp,d a
been devoted to the best arrangement lllg ,n the course of ono of thg
of things. | speeches this remark was made:
I "Every commercial man should be Alfll/ IIT iniflMI*
Keep it In mind that the men who a polittcan-not an aspirant for office, hSijlli if LmIIAlillt
co-operate get the money, and the men . but a politlclan ln tha senae ()t gay,Hg lltaUlf nWllh
who do not co-operate do the work i wj,0 ]aw-makers of the Stats'
and let the money go to the co-opera and what ]awg they can> wUh juit)cft
tors- i establish."
inouiul letters received from sufferers
cured. In writing Dr. Kilmer & Co.,
llinghamton, N.Y.. be sure and mention
this paper. Don't make any mistake,
but remember the name, Swamp-Root,
Dr. Kilmer's Swatup-Root( and the ad-
dress, liiugliamton, N. Y., on every
bottle.
Women Workers of Great Britain.
Women of Great Britain are well rep-
resented In the professions and trades,
and about 4,500,000 earn their own
living. There are 124,000 who teach;
10,000 are bookkeepers; over 11,000 are
printers and nearly 500 act as editors
and compilers; 1,300 are engaged In
photography; civil service clerks num-
ber nearly 2,300; 3,800 are engaged ill
medical work and nursing and 350
women are blacksmiths.
This Is No Joke.
Hunt's ("ure has saved more people
from tho "Old Scratch" than any other
known agent, simply because It makes
scratching entirely unnecessary. One
application relieves any form of itch-
ing skin disease that ever afflicted
mankind. One box guaranteed to euro
any ono case.
A soft answer tnrneth many a young
man's thoughts toward the furniture
installment houses.
Part of the-educatlonal campaign I . /""TVre"ters' f?"
ought to be based upon the present in,':r^>0" *-3^
This of all times and do likewise. The newsp&rflrs will
financial condition. ...... ... - — , „ . . .
Is an occasion from which to draw a caU 11 co-operation on tha
lesson of economy and thrift.
| part of the merchants, of course, but
in your case they will likely call it
,hH j rank, radical class politics. But don't
PILLS.
Positively cured by
these Little Plllja
They alno relieve Dirt-
treutt/roin Dyspepnla, Ju-
d iRi'Ntion nnd Too Hearty
Eating. A perfect rem-
edy for Dizziness, Nau*
nea, Drowsiness, Bad
Tante In the Mouth, Coat*
ed Tonffue, Pain In the
Side, TOIIPID LIVER.
They regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable.
After the plough has opened
dltcbefe so as to drain the roadways J"0" scared off You have more SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE,
put on the split log drag; it will do ; r'£ht tlinn the profit-takers to say whe
the rest. Use the drag when it is too shal! be the law-makers and what laws
muddy to work at anything else. be made. If you don't get busy
That's the sort of times to use the
drag.
In the face of such movements to die
tate laws by those who live off youi
labor, may the Lord have mercy on
The only way to fix It so it will stay the rising generation of agricultural
fixed Is to fix it so that every man toilers!—Abilene Farmers Journal,
who works will receive the full value | Any man who aspires to be of any
of what his work produces. Just as i real value to his country is enough ol
long as somebody else gets a part of j a politician to go to the polls ever}
it there is going to be trouble. Farm- . t|me there is an election and vote his
ers Journal. : honest opinion as to Ills country's wel-
A sack of meal, a sack of flour and fare "e ,akes time, t<jp, to know
a side of bacon look mighty good I what 's Bolng on in his county, State
when you are not sure but all cred.lt and Nation. You bet, every Amerf
as well as cash will be shut ofT before can man Is a politician, and he ought
Saturday night. Get on a piece of j tp be.
land of your own and diversify. Canlt |
GARTERS
ITTLE
IVER
PILLS.
get land of your own?
Farmers Journal.
Then, why?— j Have you saved out your seed corn
for next spring?
Governor Haskell has completed tho
personnel of the board of regents ol
the state normal schools by appoint
ing D. C. Rose of Blackwell and J.
B. Moseley of Sulphur as members
A. S. Wyly of Tahlequah Is the third
member.
At Nashville, Tenn., Chancellor
Stout rendered a devislon revoking the
license of the Standard Oil company to
do business in Tennessee. Illegal dis-
crimination was alleged against the
company. The defendant will appeal.
Nine-tenths of the people of Mobile.
Ala., are against prohibition, and the
passage of the Carmlchael statutory
prohibition bill has caused open
threats of secession from the state,
and the declaration that the law "will
not be observed in this cosmopolitan
town, that "has been wet since it was
discovered by the French, centuries
ago."
Why not make Vncle Sam your! All the other followlngs have form-
banker by depositing your money in j ed co-operative organizations for tuk
his postofflce? Then you can always ; lng care of mutual Interests, and the
get it when you go after It. At least farmer would as well make up hit
he has never yet told the people that I mind that he Isn't getting his until hs
he proposed to keep their deposits In i is able to stand the onslaughts of th
order to protect their Interests.—Far- j other combines.
mers Journal.
I Somebody will have to hold the cot-
ton until the mill wants to spin It.
The common sense view of the matter
Is that the man who raises It is in a
better position to hold It than any-
body else, for he has It at less cost
than any other one could have It, and
he can hold it at less expense than
any other man on earth.
Europe is getting ahead of us In the
balloon industry only because the war
office over there doesn't care what It
does with the taxpayers' money.
Names Rjferees In Bankruptcy
GUTHRIE. In the United tSatei
district couit Saturday Judge Cob
teral announced the appointment ol
the general referees in bankruptcy fo
tho Western district of Oklahoma.
Each county la created a referee's
district. The appointments are as
follows*
H. J. Sturgis of Enid, S. S. Law-
rence of Guthrie, R. A. Lyle of Klng>
fisher, B. M. Parmenter of Lawtou,
Loyal J. Miller of Oklahoma City, i,
M. Van Winkle ot Shawnee.
Commissioners of agriculture ot
several states held their ninth annual
convention at Columbia, S. C., last
week. Agricultural workers from all
over the south were in attendance.
The program included many pipers ot
great Interest to southern farmers.
John Baker, live stock sanitary com-
missioner of Kansas, has announced
that the "open season," the time in
which southern cattle will be admittea
Into Kansas, will begin on December 1
and close January 31, 1908.
Communications which have come
to the treasury department approving
the financial policy adopted by the
president und Secretary Cortelyou and
the subscriptions which were receivea
tor Panama bonds and one years cer-
tificates were the subject of discus-
sion at a meeting of the cabinet and
afforded general gratification. Whll;
the details regarding the subscriptions
arB not yet being made public it
•eoilis to bo the feeling that both loans
will b." oversubscribed as was tho case
with tho popular loaa of *100,000,001) Is
lined by the Cleveland administration
in 11>96.
If the Union has not been any bene-
fit to you, It Is likely that you have
not been a very good members. Have
you attended the meetings regularly
and at all times tried to see that the
meetings were worth attending? Have
you tried to make them so good that
none would ever miss a meeting?
If you have done this there is no sort
of doubt that you are eminently satis-
fled with the Union and are In fullest
sympathy with Its objects
! Oo Into the kitchen today and look
around and see If you have put every-
thing in as convenient a place as you
can.
The reason for the need of constant
campaign work Is the ignorance of th«
principles and plan3 of the organize
tlon among the masses ot the people
who are not members, and amoni
even some of the members of the
Union. This campaign should not be
confined to the work of the regulai
lecturers, but should be the pleasant
duty of every member of the Unloa
A Sunday suit doez not make a maq
a saint.
While some money Is being made at
fruit growing, and by growing ordi-
nary fruit, much more can be made bj
growing the best with the best ol
care There is always a demand foi
the best, while the market Is glutted
with the lower grades.
Genuine Must Bear
Fac-Simile Signature
REFUSE SUBSTITUTES.
New and Liberal Homestead
Regulations in
WESTERN
CANADA
New Districts Now Opened lor Settlement
Some of the choicest
lands in the grain grow-
ing belts of Saskatche-
wan and Alberta have
recently been opened
for settlement under
the Revised Homestead
Regulations of Canada.
Thousands of home-
bteads of 160 acres each
*re now available. The new regulations make it
possible for entry to be made by pi oxy, the oppor-
tunity that many in tho United States have been
waiting for. Any member of a family may make
entry for any other member of the family, who may
be entitled to make entry for himself or herself.
Untry may now be made before the Agent or Sub-
Agent of tho District by proxy, (on certain condi-
lions! by the father, mother, son. daughter, brother
or Bister of intending homesteader.
"Any even numbered Motion of Itomlnlon
fonda tn Manltot* or tbe North West Prorlnoea,
•looptlng and M, not reserved, may be borne-
■te*ded by any person the note l>e d of a family,
or male over IRx earn of age, to tbe extent of one-
quarter ieetlonj of 1W acrea, more or leea."
The fee in each case will be fio.oo. Chnrches.
Schools and markets convenient. Healthy climate,
splendid crops and good laws. Grain-growing and
sattle raising principal industries
For further particulate as to rates, routes, best
time to go and where to locate, apply to
J. S. CEAWP0ID.
Rs. 125 W. Ninth Stmt. kansas City. Mlmwi
As the fall and winter weathor nrv
proaches there are many things to ba
done In the orchard that will help the
work next spring.
Political economy Is a good thing In
Its place, and its place and Importance ! —
ahould not be overlooked, but domestic ! 'n collecting seeds, cure should bo
economy Is so much closer to home ' taken to gather only from vigorous
that you can feel it all the time. Kcon-: well-formed trees and plants Thf
omy dot-s not mean the close use of 9eeds of nearly all kind3 are bettpr for
money either as many Ignorant peo-; careru, „ , wh rh d
pie suppose It means the getting out : , . , . ,
of •Tarytuing ™ do the fullest value ln ^fore ">.lng put away,
and the utllliatlon to the uttermost Thls hould •>' Weoe In a cool, airy
til the opportunities presented to U* I pU«e.
MADE FOR SERVICE
IN THE ROUGHEST WEATHER
AND GUARANTEED ABSOLUTELY
> WATERPROOF
POMMEL
SLICKERS
\
This trade mark
and the word
TOWER on the
buttons distin-
guish this high
grade slicker from
the just as good
brands
DIP AfllTDC of this paper de-
siring to buy any-
thing advertised
its columns should insist upon having
wnat they ask (or, refusing all substi-
tutes or imitations.
Thompson'* fja Water
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Garfield County Democrat. (Enid, Okla.), Vol. 11, No. 5, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 27, 1907, newspaper, November 27, 1907; Enid, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc167139/m1/3/: accessed July 16, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.